Guest guest Posted April 13, 2006 Report Share Posted April 13, 2006 RAF man who refused to serve in Iraq found guilty (Filed: 13/04/2006) An RAF doctor who refused to serve in Iraq has been sentenced to eight months in prison by a court martial for disobeying orders. Malcolm Kendall-Smith believes the war is illegal Ft Lt Dr Malcolm Kendall-Smith, who has announced his intention to appeal, will also be dismissed from the service. Justin Hugheston-Roberts, Kendall-Smith's solicitor, said outside the court that his client was " distressed " by the length of his sentence but did not regret his actions. He said: " Quite clearly the decision of the board is most distressing and the doctor is clearly upset yet resilient. " However, he has asked me to state that now, more so than ever, he feels that his actions were totally justified and he would not, if placed in the same circumstances, seek to do anything differently. " Kendall-Smith was convicted by a panel of five RAF officers of five charges of failing to comply with lawful orders. During his court martial he likened the invasion of Iraq to a Nazi war crime The 37-year-old, who has dual British/New Zealand citizenship, had argued at the court in Aldershot, Hants, that the on-going presence of American-led forces in Iraq was illegal. Kendall-Smith told the military hearing that he refused to serve in Basra, Iraq, last July because he did not want to be complicit with an " act of aggression " contrary to international law. He said: " I have evidence that the Americans were on a par with Nazi Germany with its actions in the Persian Gulf. I have documents in my possession which support my assertions. " This is on the basis that on-going acts of aggression in Iraq and systematically applied war crimes provide a moral equivalent between the US and Nazi Germany. " Kendall-Smith, who tutored in philosophy at a New Zealand university, added that he refused to take part in training and equipment fitting prior to the deployment because he believed these were " preparatory acts which were equally criminal as the act itself " . David Perry, prosecuting, said the case against Kendall-Smith was that the orders were lawful and he had a duty to obey them as a commissioned officer. He added that the question of the invasion of Iraq was irrelevant because it occurred prior to the charges which date back to last year. And he said that at the time of the charges, the presence of coalition forces in Iraq was unquestionably legal because they were there at the request of the country's democratically-elected government. The charges faced by Kendall-Smith were that on June 1, 2005 he failed to comply with a lawful order to attend RAF Kinloss, Moray, for pistol and rifle training, that he failed on June 6, 2005 to attend a helmet fitting and between June 12 and 24, 2005 failed to attend a training course. He also denied failing to comply with an order to attend a deployment briefing at RAF Lyneham on June 30, 2005 and failing to comply with an order to replace a squadron leader for Operation Telic in Basra, Iraq on July 12, 2005. You can bomb the world to pieces You can't bomb it into peace Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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